India is the only major country of the world facing a fiercest insurgency of such a scale that nearly half of the country has plunged into instability imperiling the security of the remaining half. As a matter of fact, destabilized India poses grave risks to the peace and security of not only the region, the world at large will be exposed to destabilization. The sheer size of the country, its nuclear arsenal and its uncontrolled ambition to reign in the world makes it even a bigger monster than Al Qaeda and other such entities.

Presently, seven states of North East India, known as Seven Sisters, and an equal number of states from North East to South West of the country, known as Red Corridor, are up in arms against the Union of India. In the North Western State of Jammu and Kashmir, the independence movement is in full swing considerably eroding the writ of the government. The independence movements and insurgency in India have created security problems, not only for India itself, but the entire region of South Asia. In order to divert public and the world attention from internal security issues, India has kept itself engaged in reckless arms race and raised the bogey of external threat, most notably from Pakistan and China, both nuclear states.

Encircling Pakistan is a broader and medium-term strategic objective of Indias security establishment. The long-term objective is to disintegrate Pakistan and annex it in the Indian Union in line with Indias another strategic objective to reformulate Akhand Bharat. This is being achieved through efforts for extending its influence to Pakistans neighboring countries of Iran and Afghanistan. Opening of needless consulates along Pakistan-Afghanistan border to fund, fan and fuel Taliban and Baloch insurgency in order to destabilize its archrival is a part of the bigger game plan. Similarly, building of Chabahar port west of Pakistans deep sea port of Gwadar is an attempt to encircle Pakistan and deny China an energy corridor. Its extension of its sphere of influence to Indian Ocean and realigning itself with the states against China to serve American interests on the issue of South China Sea brings into conflict of a bigger proportion. In order to stop India from treading this dangerous trajectory, its internal insurgency needs to be brought under control.

There are serious tensions between Seven Sisters namely; Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Manipur, and Nagaland and the Indian government. The movements are generally homegrown and are separatist movements in character. Assam has been the hotbed of militancy for a number of years due to its porous borders with Bangladesh and Bhutan. The insurgency status in Assam is classified as very active. Insurgent groups in Manipur may be broadly classified into hill-based and valley based. While the former demand for tribal state to preserve their tribal cultures from outside influence, the latter based their demands for independence from historical perspective claiming that Manipur a princely state with its geographical area extending to as far as the Kabaw valley of modern Myanmar during the British colonialism and was never a part of India and continues to remain so. The situation is no different in other states.

The Red Corridor is a term used to describe an impoverished region in the east of India that experiences considerable Naxalite communist insurgency. These are also areas that suffer from the greatest illiteracy, poverty and overpopulation in modern India, and span parts of Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal states. Naxalites have been declared as a terrorist organization under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act of India (1967). According to Govt. of India, as of July 2011, 83 districts (figure includes proposed addition of 20 districts) across nine states are affected by Left Wing Extremism down from 180 districts in 2009.

The insurgency in Kashmir has existed in various forms since the controversial accession of State to Indian Union. Thousands of lives have been lost since 1989 due to the intensification of both the insurgency and the state brutalities to curb it. According to official figures released in Jammu and Kashmir assembly (Indian controlled), there were 3,400 disappearance cases and the conflict has left more than 47,000 people dead as of July 2009.A widespread armed insurgency started in Kashmir with the disputed 1987 election with some elements from the State's assembly forming militant wings which acted as a catalyst for the emergence of armed insurgency in the region. This region has been a source of tension and reason for three wars between India and Pakistan and, after both the states have become nuclear-armed states, it can become a flashpoint of nuclear showdown.

India's Northeast consisting of the Seven Sisters is one of South Asia's hottest trouble spots, not simply because the region has as many as 30 armed insurgent organizations operating and fighting the Indian state, but because trans-border linkages that these groups have, and strategic alliances among them, have acted as force multipliers and have made the conflict dynamics all the more intricate. With demands of these insurgent groups ranging from secession to autonomy and the right to self-determination, and a plethora of ethnic groups clamoring for special rights and the protection of their distinct identity, the region is bound to be a turbulent one.

Moreover, the location of the eight northeastern Indian States itself is part of the reason why it has always been a hotbed of militancy with trans-border ramifications. This region of 263,000 square kilometers shares highly porous and sensitive frontiers with China in the North, Myanmar in the East, Bangladesh in the South West and Bhutan to the North West. The region's strategic location is underlined by the fact that it shares a 4,500 km-long international border with its four South Asian neighbors, but is connected to the Indian mainland by a tenuous 22 km-long land corridor passing through Siliguri in the eastern State of West Bengal, appropriately described as the Chicken's Neck.'

The situation in the Red Corridor is no less grave. The first 25 years of the Naxalite insurgency were characterized by the communist principles on which the movement was founded. Fighting for land reform, the rebels gained support from the impoverished rural populations of eastern and central India. The Maoist rebellion quickly adopted violence and terror as the core instruments of its struggle against the Indian authority. Primary targets included railway tracks, post offices, and other state infrastructure, demonstrating the Maoists commitment to undermining a central government that they believed exploited low castes and rural populations. As states and the central government employed uncoordinated and underfunded responses to the Naxalites, the threat expanded beyond West Bengal and its neighboring states.

In 2004, the two predominant rebel groups, the Maoist Communist Center (MCC) and the Peoples War Group (PWG), merged together. The resulting Communist Party of India (Maoist) emerged as a solidified base of power for the Naxalites, with a stated goal of overthrowing the Indian government. It has developed in its modern form as a rebellion that comprises up to 40,000 permanent armed cadres and 100,000 additional militia members.

The nascent stages of the movement reflected the stark contrast between urbanized areas of India and the primarily rural, underdeveloped regions of Naxalite influence. With the Maoist rebels firmly entrenched in geographically remote areas, Indian government resources remained dedicated to urban security and development concerns. As India looks increasingly to its east for vital resources, the conflict continues to expand beyond the principles of its origin. With a growing population and new development initiatives that require additional coal-powered electricity sources, Indias urban centers have come into direct contact with the states most affected by the Naxalite uprising: West Bengal, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, and Maharashtra. Containing 85 percent of Indias coal reserves, these states have presented insurgents with an opportunity both to strike at the heart of national interests and to seek economic profit of their own.

This brief description of Indian insurgency shows that India has serious problems with all its neighboring states who India wants to bully into submission in order to quell the insurgency. Its problems having potential of triggering regional wars of nuclear proportions are with Pakistan and China.

In the interest of global peace, it is essential to break India into smaller states to thwart the risk of global anarchy and regional wars. The long-standing demand of Jammu and Kashmir for independence, already accepted by the world community should be translated into reality. The states of the Red Corridor may be given autonomy and the Seven Sisters should be accepted as ethnic and cultural entity for statehood. If India gets rid of these warring states, it can progress as a vibrant country, it neighbors will have a measure of safety and security and the world at large will be immune to any disorder which is staring it in the face at the moment

Balkanisation of India (if achieved by whatever means) need not necessarily guarantee peace in the region because there will be more areas of dispute and more facets of conflict.

I am not saying India is beyond Balkanisation.... India is as susceptible as any other country, or in fact more so, because of the various competing strong subnationalities, even if the conflict-prone Kashmir and the North-East are kept aside. There are any number of centrifugal pulls within the Indian nation itself.

Like in the case of most other regions, India's integrity is closely linked to its economic performance. The expanding middle class is its insurance against Balkanisation as they will continue to aspire for an unfragmented economy because of higher development potential. Rapid urbanisation and internal migration are the other factors that would keep India together.

well we had Balkanisation of afghanistan and who suffered its Pakistan , if we think by Balkanisation of India we will have better security its wrong where the refuges will come to Pakistan right ? and what will happen to nuclear weapons imagine a crazy sikh federation has nuclear weapons and they want to liberate lahore from Pakistan?

well i can understand we will drop 10 bombs on them but they will definitely drop one bomb on us ...

well we had Balkanisation of afghanistan and who suffered its Pakistan , if we think by Balkanisation of India we will have better security its wrong where the refuges will come to Pakistan right ? and what will happen to nuclear weapons imagine a crazy sikh federation has nuclear weapons and they want to liberate lahore from Pakistan?

well i can understand we will drop 10 bombs on them but they will definitely drop one bomb on us ...

Aren't the conflicts plaguing Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Russia and many central Asian CIS republics a result of Soviet Union's Balkanisation? And moreover, the thorny issue of Blak Sea nuclear submarine fleet is still not fully resolved and Crimea incident was influenced by that.

well we had Balkanisation of afghanistan and who suffered its Pakistan , if we think by Balkanisation of India we will have better security its wrong where the refuges will come to Pakistan right ? and what will happen to nuclear weapons imagine a crazy sikh federation has nuclear weapons and they want to liberate lahore from Pakistan?

well i can understand we will drop 10 bombs on them but they will definitely drop one bomb on us ...

well we had Balkanisation of afghanistan and who suffered its Pakistan , if we think by Balkanisation of India we will have better security its wrong where the refuges will come to Pakistan right ? and what will happen to nuclear weapons imagine a crazy sikh federation has nuclear weapons and they want to liberate lahore from Pakistan? well i can understand we will drop 10 bombs on them but they will definitely drop one bomb on us ...

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Afghanistan wasn't Balkanized, isn't Balkanized and will not be Balkanized, in any way, shape or form. Reason? Well, it is a simple comprehension of the demographic layout of the country. Where, in order for a country be Balkanized, it needs to have some sort of ethnic divide. When 80% of Afghanistan is Pakhtun and the remaining 20% is divided between Tajik, Uzbek, Hazara & Aimak. These ethnic groups further share the 20% minority with Nuristanis, Pashai, Brahui & Pamiri ethnic groups.

Hence, there has to be an significant minority to actually challenge a majority ethnic group, in order to achieve Balkanization. Where it didn't happen with the British wars against the Afghans, the Soviet invasion & 9 year occupation of Afghanistan and finally the the American invasion & 13 year occupation of Afghanistan.

In any of these invasions/wars, the adversary (UK, USSR or USA), would have taken the easier route. Which is, to divide and conquer. But in all cases, the feasibility of such a stratagem, didn't offer positive results. Hence all adversaries invaded the country and two of three, occupied it for near or over a decade. And in all cases, the invader experience it's military and psychological strength, deplete by every passing day.

Lastly, what did not happen in the past 267 years, wouldn't possibly happen now and not taken place in the recent past either.

........ when the first drop of a Munafiq's blood drops in the Kaa'bah ........

........ the Black Flags Army shall rise from Khurasan and commence its earth rumbling march toward Damishque. Any force that tries to come in its path, shall be destroyed with ruthless destruction. Awaiting, upon reaching Damishque, the safron and beads of pearls and the Black Turban that shall lead the Salah of Fajr .........

........ the stones and trees of Lud shall cry out to the Black Flags and tell them of the Munafiqs, Yahuds and Kuffar that are hiding behind them, to come and kill them. That day shall be the day of reckoning, the day of justice, the day when no power shall hold and unfair advantage. The battle shall be fought and won by way of faith ........

Security and stability for the continent of Asia, lay in the cooperation and closer integrated ties between countries of the continent.

Having said that, there are many factors involved, which hinder and sometimes negate the real solution to stability in Asia. These factors include external (countries outside Asia) elements, which have been meddling in the affairs of the Asian continent, for centuries.

To start with, the first and very real criminal mastermind, was and still is, Britain. The former colonial power, who by way of deception, managed to usurp the entire territory of the Mughal Empire. It then went on to control or subjugate the various princely states neighboring the Mughal Empire, within the Southern Asia's Peninsula.

The British, have managed to keep the Kashmir Dispute, a major conflict driven thorn, in the side of Pakistan & india. They also have managed to favor one over the other, in order to keep the Muslims from ever developing their nation and to prosper. So sinister is the craftsmanship of the British, that they are no where to be seen in active combat zones or wars that have taken between Pakistan & india.

Similar is the case of the British meddling in China. Where they managed to colonize Hong Kong and even though they have relinquished control of the territory to China. The institution that they put in place, in Hong Kong, is to this day resisting integration back into mainland China.

There is also American meddling in the Asian continent. Where America has permanent military bases in Japan, Australia, SouthKorea, New Zealand & Singapore. Presence of American military gives way to American influence over the regions of the Asian Continent. And of course, where there is the American, there you can be sure to find American interference in the domestic politics and foreign policy.

Today, if there is to be any stability and security in Asia. Then there needs to be resolution of all disputes between the Asian countries. Which would then be followed by the expulsion of all British, French & American influence in the Asian Continent. This would provide the necessary building blocks for the integration of the Asian Continent and enhanced economic ties.

Without the resolution to all outstanding disputes between the Asian countries. There is no hope of establishing peace, stability and security in the Continent of Asia.

........ when the first drop of a Munafiq's blood drops in the Kaa'bah ........

........ the Black Flags Army shall rise from Khurasan and commence its earth rumbling march toward Damishque. Any force that tries to come in its path, shall be destroyed with ruthless destruction. Awaiting, upon reaching Damishque, the safron and beads of pearls and the Black Turban that shall lead the Salah of Fajr .........

........ the stones and trees of Lud shall cry out to the Black Flags and tell them of the Munafiqs, Yahuds and Kuffar that are hiding behind them, to come and kill them. That day shall be the day of reckoning, the day of justice, the day when no power shall hold and unfair advantage. The battle shall be fought and won by way of faith ........

I agree with Dizasta but Pakistan should also give up war like racial/ethnic superiority myths. Indians dont have any such myths thankfully - The only problem India has is to manage harmony between various religious and languages within its border. But thats internal problem which Pakistan also shares.